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The Lion [Hardcover]

Nelson DeMille
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (368 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 8, 2010
In this eagerly awaited follow-up to The Lion's Game, John Corey, former NYPD Homicide detective and special agent for the Anti-Terrorist Task Force, is back. And, unfortunately for Corey, so is Asad Khalil, the notorious Libyan terrorist otherwise known as "The Lion." Last we heard from him, Khali had claimed to be defecting to the US only to unleash the most horrific reign of terrorism ever to occur on American soil. While Corey and his partner, FBI agent Kate Mayfield, chased him across the country, Khalil methodically eliminated his victims one by one and then disappeared without a trace.

Now, years later, Khalil has returned to America to make good on his threats and take care of unfinished business. "The Lion" is a killing machine once again loose in America with a mission of revenge, and John Corey will stop at nothing to achieve his own goal -- to find and kill Khahil.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Asad Khalil (aka "The Lion"), the ruthless Libyan terrorist who menaced ex-NYPD cop John Corey in The Lion's Game (2000), returns to the U.S. 18 months after 9/11, bent on finishing old business in DeMille's fast-paced fifth John Corey thriller (after Wild Fire). In Los Angeles, Khalil dispatches the last of the eight American pilots who dropped the bombs that killed Khalil's family in the historic 1986 raid on Tripoli. In New York City, a daring encounter with Corey, a member of the federal Anti-Terrorist Task Force, and Corey's FBI agent wife, Kate Mayfield, who's also a member of the ATTF, sets the stage for the mano a mano struggle both Corey and Khalil crave. DeMille splices gripping action scenes with accounts of Khalil's horrifically inventive attacks and the ATTF's futile countermeasures. While Corey isn't much more appealing than his foe, those who enjoy starkly black-and-white battles between good and evil will be satisfied.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In The Lion's Game (2000), terrorist Asad Khalil, also known as the Lion, came to the U.S. to kill the people responsible for bombing his village in Libya. John Corey, the NYPD cop turned antiterrorist agent, and his FBI trainer, Kate Mayfield, gave chase, but their quarry got away. Now it's a few years later, not too long after 9/11. John and Kate are married, and John's an experienced agent with his own trainee. Out of the blue sky—literally, in a very creative and exciting scene—Khalil swoops down, bent on continuing his revenge against the people behind the bombing. And now he's added Corey to his hit list. Can Corey outmaneuver and outwit a determined, ruthless assassin? This is a well-constructed and satisfying sequel, full of exciting (and occasionally gruesome) visual imagery. Corey is a more developed character this time around, and Khalil is every bit as intelligent, cold, and compelling as he was in The Lion's Game. If the book has a flaw, it's that it might be a little close in feel, plot, and even dramatic structure to the earlier book. On the other hand, Khalil is a single-minded guy, and it doesn't stretch credibility at all to imagine that he'd pick up right where he left off. --David Pitt

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing (June 8, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 044658083X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446580830
  • Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.5 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (368 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #148,827 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born in New York City in 1943. My father was a Canadian, serving at that time with the American Navy, and my mother was a Brooklyn native, trying to figure out how to grow a Victory Garden for the war effort.

My family moved to Elmont, Long Island, New York in 1947 where my father was a house builder, and my mother was a homemaker raising four boys.
I attended Elmont public schools, played football, ran track, and was on the wrestling team. I graduated Elmont Memorial High School in 1962 and spent the summer at the beach.

I attended Hofstra University, but left before graduation to join the Army in 1966. I served three years in the United States Army as an infantry lieutenant and spent one year in Vietnam as a platoon leader with the First Cavalry Division. You'll see that I used this experience in my novels "Word of Honor" and "Up Country."

After the end of my military service, I returned to Hofstra where I graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and History. I married and had two children, Lauren and Alex, and eventually divorced.

I held a series of good and bad jobs between 1970 and 1974, and in that year, for some reason I can't remember, I decided to be a writer. My first books were paperback originals, New York City police detective novels, thankfully all out of print and hard to find.

In 1978, I published my first major novel, "By the Rivers of Babylon," which was a commercial and critical success. Since then, I've written fourteen other novels and had a good time creating my characters John Corey, Ben Tyson (played by Don Johnson in the TNT movie of "Word of Honor"), foxy Emma Whitestone, Paul Brenner (played by John Travolta in the Paramount movie of "The General's Daughter"), sexy Susan Sutter, the never-say-die CIA officer Ted Nash, and my favorite villain, Asad Khalil, a misunderstood Libyan terrorist with unresolved childhood issues.

I am a member of The Authors Guild, the Mystery Writers of America (past President), American Mensa (thank God I don't have to retake that test), and I hold three honorary doctorate degrees (thank God I didn't have to study for them) from Hofstra University, Long Island University, and Dowling College.
I'm married to the love of my life, Sandy Dillingham, whom I met while I was on a publicity tour in Denver. We have a son, James, two years old, and he's keeping me young.

There's more about me on my website. Thanks for reading about me here, and I hope you enjoy my novels.

Customer Reviews

This is by far one of the best books by Nelson DeMille that I have read. Mary A. Chwastiak  |  71 reviewers made a similar statement
I love Nelson DeMille's John Corey series, but this could be real. TinaKay  |  43 reviewers made a similar statement
Plot has way too many holes in it, esp. the ending. Reader  |  56 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
176 of 185 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars DeMille in good form! June 8, 2010
Format:Hardcover
No spoilers here. John Corey, the ex NYPD homicide detective who now works for the Federal anti terrorism task force is the main character. This is DeMille's fifth John Corey novel (Plum Island, Lion's Game, Night Fall and Wild Fire). You do not have to read these novels to enjoy this one although DeMille does make references to events in those earlier books.

This story is set in NYC thirteen months post the 9/11 attacks. Corey is working alongside his wife Kate Mayfield an FBI agent. In a terrifying, suspenseful scene involving a skydiving trip, they encounter the Libyan terrorist Asad Khalil. DeMille presents the motivations of both Corey and Khalil; unusual for this type of thriller you can actually understand the roots of Khalil's terrorism. Events move along quickly following the initial meeting. The action is centered in the metro New York area and exploits the difficulties the federal/state/local agencies have had cooperating and sharing intelligence information. Corey stands above the bureaucracy and has a singular focus on bringing down the terrorist. The characters in this novel are engaging, funny and sharply drawn. Corey is non-stop with the wisecracks, I find them funny and occasionally laugh out loud funny but I can see how some readers might be annoyed by the frequency of these comments. I think you either like the Corey character or you don't.

This is a top-notch action thriller. Differing from some of DeMille's earlier novels, this one is tight and well edited coming in at around 400 pages. The novel gathers in the reader with a strong opening, the plot is well organized and believable, the ending a little abrupt. I think DeMille fans will be pleased with this installment in the John Corey series and no doubt staying up late to finish this thriller.
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52 of 57 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars He's back -- and on game! June 8, 2010
Format:Hardcover
And by "he" I mean both John Corey (former NYPD and current loose-cannon agent on the federal Anti-Terrorist Task Force), *and* Nelson DeMille (author extraordinaire of political suspense and hilarity, whose last couple of books started to worry me about the extraordinaire part).

DeMille's 16th book (the fifth in his John Corey series) is a post-9/11 sequel to The Lion's Game. Here it's 2003 New York City and Asad Khalil is back to finish his revenge against the 1986 U.S. military attack on Libya that killed his mother and siblings. And to finish John Corey.

But that's enough said about the plot ... which, whether it's terrorism, conspiracy, or the KGB, isn't really why I read DeMille. I read him for his smart-a**, alpha-male-with-tender-underbelly protagonists. And while a few sections here are by necessity in the third-person perspective of other characters, they thankfully aren't like the long stretches in Wild Fire. Instead, the majority is first-person Corey -- narrating more of a police procedural than rollicking thriller, a slower pace that immerses us in Corey's amusing persona. Also making their usual appearances are Corey's love interest (wife Kate Mayfield), the good guys of New York's Finest, the bungling FBI, and the evil CIA. Though readers new to DeMille might more logically begin with Plum Island (the first in this series and still the best), DeMille gives enough background here for anyone to enjoy this work. (With a caution: there are several brief scenes of graphic violence.
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36 of 42 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Bitterly Disappointed in"The Lion" June 29, 2010
Format:Kindle Edition
Having enjoyed the smooth professionalism of "The Charm School," I couldn't wait to read more about the Lion, introduced in an earlier book, "The Lion's Game."

But gad, what a disappointment! First of all, let me ask: did Nelson Demille's pool boy write this, with Nelson supplying the plot? Because the quality of the writing was ABYSMAL! I couldn't believe it, as I kept turning page after page. Rank amateurs who write fiction are obsessed with "he said" and "she said"--professionals know that you save your drama for the action, not how the character "said" it. I just couldn't believe it! I did wonder if Nelson let a fan write this particular book: I've read fan-written novels before (the second time was inadvertent), and they were awful. The difference between the original author and the "fan" writer was so enormous as to be almost palpable.

With regard to the plot, I found myself bored with the way the villain of the piece cut a swath, never encountering any opposition at all, never arousing suspicion, never running into a problem. Real life isn't like that.

And I agree with the reader who was fed up with John Corey's unremitting sarcasm. Normally, I quite like Demille's smart-alec protagonists, but in this book Corey's mouth got on my nerves as well, as did his extreme vulgarity. Realism is one thing, but vulgar remarks about what goes on in the bedroom between husband and wife are inappropriate. They don't advance the plot and since we know Corey quite well from earlier books, the vulgar remarks don't even have the excuse of characterizing the speaker.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars DeMille is Great! Very entertaining and realistic. I loved the cop...
Very entertaining and realistic. I loved the cop jargon throughout. John Corey is right up there with Jack Reacher. Read more
Published 5 days ago by John K. Matt
5.0 out of 5 stars First Time for DeMille
My first DeMille read & it was great. Loved all the research, the added humor and the roller coaster ride til the conclusion.
Published 5 days ago by Bettie Lee-Boehm
5.0 out of 5 stars DeMille at his best
This is the book that made me a fan. An easy read that fun, fast and keeps you on the edge. When an author can evoke emotions in me as DeMille has done, wow, that makes it an... Read more
Published 6 days ago by Butch Mazzuca
5.0 out of 5 stars Need more John Corey
A real thriller that will make you laugh out loud. Love the John Corey books and wish DeMille could write them faster.
Published 7 days ago by Nome Daffern
4.0 out of 5 stars Loved the whole series!
My husband has been reading the entire series and loves them all.
He thinks the author is funny in his sarcasm.
Published 13 days ago by Holly Eiden
3.0 out of 5 stars Always happy to read about John Corey
John Corey continues to be one of my favourites in the genre. The Lion was not the most enticing story of the series, but not bad by any means for a sequel novel. Read more
Published 15 days ago by Priscilla Zenon
5.0 out of 5 stars One of Nelson DeMille's best
I really enjoyed this as I do with most of Nelson DeMille's novels. Not a lot I could add to what has already been expressed in others earlier positive reviews.
Published 19 days ago by Pogopog
4.0 out of 5 stars Excitement all the way
Actually 4 1/2 is more accurate. Love the way DeMille writes a story. Hard to put the book down once I started to read it.
Published 20 days ago by Nancy R. Smith
5.0 out of 5 stars finishes the story
I didn't know that this was a sequel to the Lions' Game until I started reading it. I always wondered how it would end - now I know. Very easy reading. Read more
Published 27 days ago by Laurence D. McDonald
5.0 out of 5 stars Another DeMille WINNER!!
Another good Detective John Corey story. A very plausible follow-up to 9-11. The Anti Terrorist Task Force is tested to the limit and a lot transpires during the story!!
Published 27 days ago by Rusty Knorr
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Nelson DeMille's The Lion Price on Kindle
Pretty amazing price. I was about to pre-order, but since it will go to best seller within days, guess I'll wait to see the price drop and order it then with instant delivery. Unless Amazon is likely to run out of eCopies right away. Maybe I should order it now. Maybe not.

Y'know, for a... Read more
Apr 12, 2010 by Gregory J Smith |  See all 15 posts
Nelson Demille, The Lion
Someone is being terribly disingenuous about the 2011 publication date given the that this book came out in 2010. Lets look at this deception a little more:
1. I got an email saying that this book will be released on June 7, 2011. True given its a reprint. However, I read the book last year. ... Read more
May 24, 2011 by Gregory L. Firth |  See all 2 posts
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